SURFACING presents the ongoing collaboration between Gaia Crocella, Mireia Ludevid Llop, and Julia Schauerman. This work explores the poetic potential of recontextualising uncertain memories through sensorial methods and transnational perspectives. Responding to Ludevid Llop's research on her family's photographic archive, its narratives, and historical gaps, SURFACING revisits the history of Faió. Like multiple other villages, the Francoist regime flooded Faió to construct a hydroelectric dam in 1967 as part of its economic development plan. As a step in the regime's "hydro-social dream", which sought to modernise and homogenise the territory and population, Faió was submerged into the Riba-roja enclosure, displacing its inhabitants to a new village. This erasure separated the population from its natural and social ecology, completely uprooting previous forms of organisation and identity. SURFACING documents a return to Faió through audiovisual field recordings. This work reconnects with autobiographical and spatial memories to offer alternative archival readings. Situated within the perspective of the third generation after the event, remembering despite not knowing becomes a method to activate different historical positions of inquiry and re-imagine suppressed pasts. What seems lost becomes generative. Interweaving archival materials, family conversations, reflections, and present-day Faió, we invite the audience to meet this inherited silence and re-member through the recorded everyday.